What's the price of a home, condo or apartment in Chapala and Ajijic, Mexico?
Mark O'Neill
Depending on your personal desires, you can get a small condominium or even a small home in Ajijic starting as low as around US $50,000. This would not be a huge space perhaps at that price point be it a condo or a home. It would have one or two bedrooms, a small lawn or yards (shared ones for condominiums). You can get something nicer starting around $100,000 for a two or three-bedroom home with a bit of a yard.
You also have to decide if you want to be...
Depending on your personal desires, you can get a small condominium or even a small home in Ajijic starting as low as around US $50,000. This would not be a huge space perhaps at that price point be it a condo or a home. It would have one or two bedrooms, a small lawn or yards (shared ones for condominiums). You can get something nicer starting around $100,000 for a two or three-bedroom home with a bit of a yard.
You also have to decide if you want to be close to the lakeside or the village area. There are wonderful mountains within a quarter mile of the lake that afford you a view of the beautiful Lake Chapala.
My personal purchase was a rather large space. It is a 5,200 square feet with four bedrooms and three bathrooms. We have a huge mirador, a 1,350 foot rooftop patio with a full bar and a barbecue. It has a swimming pool, a hot tub, and a 850 foot entertainment section for parties. Next to it is an 850 square foot apartment, which is a separate building from the main house. We have the avocado orchard and a lime orchard next door that I purchased as well, all for $330,000. The size of the lot is just a hair over half an acre. It’s not huge, but it is certainly very spacious and it has beautiful trees, with birds of paradise and bougainvillea all over the place. We have hibiscus trees and a wonderful environment. Our real estate property tax is only $420 per year.
(Mark O'Neal's pool and steps uo to the mirador, Ajijic, Mexico, pcitured.)
ExPats in Panama: There are three established groups of ExPats that meet regularly in Panama City, Coronado and Boquete. Most are fun people. A number of ExPats can be found at the Balboa Elks Lodge building on La Boca Road in the bar area behind the Don Profit restaurant area in front. The restaurant is operated by a contractor who has a restaurant on Via Argentina also. In the Canal Zone "hay day" the restaurant was operated by the Elks. ...
ExPats in Panama: There are three established groups of ExPats that meet regularly in Panama City, Coronado and Boquete. Most are fun people. A number of ExPats can be found at the Balboa Elks Lodge building on La Boca Road in the bar area behind the Don Profit restaurant area in front. The restaurant is operated by a contractor who has a restaurant on Via Argentina also. In the Canal Zone "hay day" the restaurant was operated by the Elks. The members meet once a month on the second floor.
Left, Balboa Yacht Club (located in Amador) is a good place to find ExPats, especially at sunset for Happy Hour & a last salute to a beautiful sunset over the canal with the Bridge of the Americas in the background.
Right, ExPats at the Balboa Yacht Club (BYC)
Left, Sunset at the BYC with the Pacific side entrance to the Canal in the foreground.
You don’t really have to own a car in Granada, Nicaragua, if you just want to stay within the city, because everything is within walking distance. If you really need to take a car someplace, you can take a taxi. If you are planning to go to Managua, or if you want to go to the beach, then you need a car. If you are just on vacation then you can just rent a car for just what you want to do.
If you live within the central area of Granada, you can...
You don’t really have to own a car in Granada, Nicaragua, if you just want to stay within the city, because everything is within walking distance. If you really need to take a car someplace, you can take a taxi. If you are planning to go to Managua, or if you want to go to the beach, then you need a car. If you are just on vacation then you can just rent a car for just what you want to do.
If you live within the central area of Granada, you can walk to places. But if you want to go to other places such as if you want to go to the lake or if you want to go to Managua to go shopping, or to the ocean, you would need some way to get there, so for these trips, a car is recommended. An alternative is to get a car rental and ask the driver to just charge you one way since you could take a taxi to all these places if you wanted to. However, if you were going to Managua, taking a taxi or always renting a car would be a bit expensive.
What are the things I'll be most happily surprised by when moving or retiring abroad?
David Reid
What you will be most surprised about after moving abroad will depend on how open-minded you are, and of course as mentioned above, where you will be moving. But if you are open-minded and flexible, and don't put yourself into an expat bubble, you will be surprised how many of your basic assumptions will be called into question.
For example, many people tell me that they can't travel for a long time because they cannot imagine life without (then they name...
What you will be most surprised about after moving abroad will depend on how open-minded you are, and of course as mentioned above, where you will be moving. But if you are open-minded and flexible, and don't put yourself into an expat bubble, you will be surprised how many of your basic assumptions will be called into question.
For example, many people tell me that they can't travel for a long time because they cannot imagine life without (then they name certain possessions, habits, conveniences, their present friends and family, their native language, etc., etc.) You will be amazed how many of these things are either there when you thought they wouldn't be, or that you can, indeed, do without, or replace by others. True, many expats never let go, so if all you are moving for is to have the same things but maybe cheaper, then you will be missing out on the greatest rewards of moving.
(Jet Metier of Best Places in the World to Retire, talking to a woman from Oaxaca, Mexico, pictured.)
My experience as an American woman in Portugal 30 years ago was not good; at that time I found it a frustratingly "macho" country. However, this has definitely changed, perhaps as Luis da Silva mentions in an earlier post, this is due to most women now working, better education, and greater exposure to global influences.
(Woman in Lisbon, Portugal, pictured.)
My experience as an American woman in Portugal 30 years ago was not good; at that time I found it a frustratingly "macho" country. However, this has definitely changed, perhaps as Luis da Silva mentions in an earlier post, this is due to most women now working, better education, and greater exposure to global influences.
The expats in Belize are fine. They mingle. What I tell my clients is that Placencia and San Pedro is “wall to wall expats” in a very small area. Here in Cayo, we have a lot of expats but they are spread around the whole district and there is not an expat hang out in Cayo. Whenever we have a party, it’s always a mixture. In a party I recently had, there were about 28 people and about a third of them were Belizeans. We mix very well here.
The expats here...
The expats in Belize are fine. They mingle. What I tell my clients is that Placencia and San Pedro is “wall to wall expats” in a very small area. Here in Cayo, we have a lot of expats but they are spread around the whole district and there is not an expat hang out in Cayo. Whenever we have a party, it’s always a mixture. In a party I recently had, there were about 28 people and about a third of them were Belizeans. We mix very well here.
The expats here in Belize are very easy going people. We very rarely get someone here who is obnoxious. They know that Belize is not like New York and they know the shortcomings that we have here about the lack of shopping. We don’t have huge stores or supermarkets, but everything works. Anything you need you can get but we don’t have the luxuries of all of America.
There was a woman here last year from New York who started criticizing the restaurants here in Cayo as being inferior to those in New York. The restaurants here are different than the restaurants in the US. We don’t usually get expats who are like that. Her attitude was very rare.
I don’t know what these expats were like before, but all my clients are my friends now and they all settled down very well. Everyone is friendly and there is no bad feeling here. Very few expats go back to the States or Canada. Once they get here, they like it here.
(Pictured: Expat with street vendor in San Pedro, Ambergris Caye, Belize.)
Would you want to live in a city that is arguably one of the hottest in Central America? (And we are not talking about "hot" in the sense of "explosive growth," but in temperature!) A city that is over 90 degrees practically year-round? A city that can at times give new meaning to the words "hot and humid"? Yes, there are places with even more heat, most of which are located near the equator. Many people have...
Get ready for the delays, the costs, fees and cumbersome legal system of Panama. Here you find it wise to use an attorney for all kinds of transactions. However it isn't just the attorney you deal with, it is bureaucracy mumbo-jumbo and administrators! Many are like the angry, underpaid, middle managers of other places. They have a little power, so they love to abuse it!
I interviewed a young attorney that is just starting out. The government sets the...
We took a day trip to Volcan and stopped by this school to see the entertainment. Costa Rican folk dancers performed for the children and we enjoyed watching them. ...